As their last order of business, do they focus on jobs? NO WAY! They instead decided to pander to their big energy masters and passed a bill that basically tries to wipe out all the regulations that protect us and the environment from the pollution created by big industry. Terrific. Nothing I love more than a little bit of mercury in my morning coffee.
With all the climate-related disasters that unfolded this year—wildfires and floods and extreme heat, not mention the Arctic sea ice that melted to a record low level—you would think that Congress might get the message that action on climate change is a necessity.
Did they? Definitely not. Since January 2011, one out of every five votes in the U.S. House of Representatives was to undermine environmental protections—315 votes out of a total of 1535.
This makes the current U.S. House of Representatives the most anti-environment Congress in history, according to a report by Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA), a member of the Committee on Energy and Commerce, and Rep. Edward Markey (D-MA), from the Committee on Natural Resources.
MORE: Accidental Vote Approves Fracking in North Carolina
The votes weren’t cosmetic either—they were efforts to weaken environmental oversight legislation like the Clean Air Act, a forty year old law that regulates air pollution, which the Environmental Protection Agency has estimated will prevent 230,000 pollution-related early deaths by 2020, and provide more than 2 trillion in economic benefits.
The House’s anti-environment votes largely fell along party lines, according the report: 94 percent of Republican members voted for the anti-environment positions, while 87 percent of Democratic members voted for the pro-environment positions.
Here’s a rundown of the most egregious voting patterns, care of Representatives Waxman and Markey:
- 77 votes were to undermine Clean Air Act protections and “block EPA regulation of toxic mercury and other harmful emissions from power plants, incinerators, industrial boilers, cement plants, and mining operations.”
- 39 votes were to weaken protection of public lands and wildlife, including removing protections for certain over-exploited or endangered species like wolves and sea turtles.
- 31 votes were to undermine Clean Water Act protections, including votes “to repeal EPA’s authority to stop mountaintop removal mining disposal; and to block EPA from protecting headwaters and wetlands that flow into navigable waters.”
- 37 votes were to block action to address climate change, “including votes to overturn EPA’s scientific findings that climate change endangers human health and welfare,” and “to prevent the United States from participating in international climate negotiations; and even to cut funding for basic climate science.”
Yes, that’s right. Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives want to overturn EPA’s scientific conclusion that climate change endangers human health and welfare.
That climate change is real and caused by human activity is a conclusion shared by 97 percent of scientists. The remaining three percent? Skeptics whose level of expertise is far below that of their peers.
Manmade climate change impacts human health and safety—that much can be deduced by the average American who has suffered extreme heat waves. But if that’s not enough, a report from the National Institutes of Health paints a terrifying picture of how climate change endangers human health—excruciating heat, degraded air quality, flooding, and an increase in bacterial infections, to name a few.
Unsurprisingly, the oil and gas industry has emerged as a big winner in the slew of anti-environment votes in the House. Since 2011, the House voted 109 times to implement policies that enrich the oil and gas industry, including votes to block clean energy development, fast-track the Keystone XL pipeline, and weaken environmental, public health, and safety requirements for oil companies.
Common Dreams points out that Republicans were the overwhelming recipients of campaign contributions from oil and gas companies—they raked in four times the amount of money from Big Oil than their Democratic counterparts.
So it should come as no surprise that on Friday afternoon, the GOP majority passed the ‘Stop the War on Coal Act,’ H.R. 3409, which would significantly weaken regulations that protect our air, water, and natural environments from over-pollution by coal fired power plants and other industries.
Despite the fact that the Senate will almost certainly strike it down, according to the New York Times, and that President Obama has already threatened to veto it, the one hundred twelfth House of Representatives decided to leave their chambers with a bang—after passing the Act, the House adjourned until mid November, off to campaign for reelection on a full time basis.
Between now and Election Day, we might do well to remind them that they work for the taxpayers—all of whom will be experiencing the effects of climate change in the future.
http://news.yahoo.com/most-anti-environ ... 21938.html
Republicans pass a sweeping anti environmental bill
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Re: Republicans pass a sweeping anti environmental bill
I can imagine these assclowns voting to overturn Galileo's scientific findings that the Earth is not the center of the universe.including votes to overturn EPA’s scientific findings that climate change endangers human health and welfare,

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Re: Republicans pass a sweeping anti environmental bill
You are mistaken. The Republicans did indeed focus on jobs...MotleyMaiden wrote:As their last order of business, do they focus on jobs? NO WAY!
WASHINGTON -- Senate Republicans blocked legislation Wednesday that would have established a $1 billion jobs program putting veterans back to work tending to the country's federal lands and bolstering local police and fire departments.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/2 ... 97377.html
See? They did focus on jobs, unfortunately it was to stop vets from getting jobs, but they focused on jobs nonetheless.
Here's the deal... I think Obama sucks BIG TIME! He's a hypocrite and a liar, but the Republicans are even worse. In order to hurt him they're willing to fuck our own veterans, who are only veterans of wars because of Republican President Bush.
I am NOT going to vote for Obama, because that would mean I'm giving that assclown my support, but I am not voting for Romney either. My state will go for Obama no matter what. It's a lesser of two evils situation and I can't support that system any longer. I hope Obama wins only because Romney would be something worse.